/me smacks some Englishumm, this thread transitioned into an english-smacking thread.
"Ow! I say."

Moderator:Æron
The dictionary on my computer says it isn'tActually, it is according to dictionary.comOh, and 'highjacked' isn't a word - it's 'hijacked'.
The dictionary on my computer says it isn'tActually, it is according to dictionary.comOh, and 'highjacked' isn't a word - it's 'hijacked'.![]()
Actually I'm fairly sure the different spellings came from regional differences before everything became organised nationwide when mass printing started.What I mean to say is that english became a language through people introducing their words into it, it never had any one specific basis. Early english didn't even have proper spellings for words
Dunno, man. The thing about Shakespeare, at least the way I heard it, is that even he didn't spell it the same every time he wrote it.Actually I'm fairly sure the different spellings came from regional differences before everything became organised nationwide when mass printing started.What I mean to say is that english became a language through people introducing their words into it, it never had any one specific basis. Early english didn't even have proper spellings for words
As such, I feel it necessary to point out that "highjack" is incorrect, according to Oxford.This thread has been highjacked by an English lesson.
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